LYCOS RETRIEVER
Boeing: Boeing Commercial Airplanes
built 657 days ago
Boeing Commercial Airplanes, a business unit of Boeing, provides unsurpassed, around-the-clock technical support to help operators maintain their airplanes in peak operating condition. Through its Commercial Aviation Services unit, Boeing provides services and solutions for the lifecycle of a customer's fleet, helping to increase airplane availability, improve reliability and enhance efficiency. Please visit http://www.boeing.com.
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New Boeing job tests Watt's power; ex-city official takes on tough task of rehabilitating company's image Seattle Times, February 10, 2002; By Kyung M. Song, Seattle Times aerospace reporter. Many Seattleites know Bob Watt as the man Boeing tipped off in advance last March about its pending defection from Seattle, a corporate secret so tightly guarded that its revelation prompted former Mayor Paul Schell to mutter plaintively to a high-ranking Boeing executive, "John, why didn't you call?"... On Jan. 3, (Bob Watt) became Boeing Commercial Airplanes vice president of government and community affairs.
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Boeing Commercial Aviation Services (CAS) plans to invest up to $75 million in India for training facilities, most of which will go to pilot training. A unit of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, CAS provides products and services to support its customers and help them improve fleet utilization, reduce costs and ensure passenger well-being. CAS will invest up to $100 million in a maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) facility for Boeing airplanes in Nagpur city, located in the State of Maharashtra in central India.
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Boeing Commercial Aviation Services, a unit of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, provides products, services and integrated solutions to improve fleet utilization, reduce costs, leverage leading-edge information management, and ensure passenger well-being. The Boeing Company is the world's leading aerospace company providing products and services to customers in 145 countries.
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Scott Carson, Boeing's commercial airplanes boss, talked to reporters about the 787 fuselage "gap" issue. No problem, he said. There was a simple explanation for why the fuselage sections did not match up exactly, and Boeing had expected this, Carson said. The 787 wings... matched perfectly when they were mated to the fuselage, Carson said.
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Boeing continues to expand its product line and develop new technologies to meet customer needs. From creating new versions of its family of commercial airplanes; to developing, producing, supporting and modifying aircraft for the U.S. military; to building launch vehicles capable of lifting more than 14 tons into orbit; to improving communications for people around the world through an advanced network of satellites, Boeing continues a long tradition of technical excellence and innovation.
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